8220,90-95% of the actual users are masculine.

The group of hackers that previously stole massive amounts of user data from popular cheating website Ashley Madison show up to have carried out their threat to publish that data on the Internet, releasing almost Ten gigabytes containing numerous details about the site’s customers on Tuesday.

A total of 9.7 gigabytes of data stolen from the controversial website &mdash, which boasts the slogan “Life is brief. Have an affair” &mdash, was published to the dark web (an encrypted section of the Internet that requires special software to use) and is only accessible through a Tor browser, Wired magazine reported.

The data dump reportedly includes the login details of about 32 million users &mdash, all seeking extramarital or illicit affairs &mdash, and also provides a staggering amount of information such as their names, email and street addresses, how much they have spent on the site and even what they are looking for in a potential cheating playmate.

The hackers, who call themselves Influence Team, had threatened in July that they would release user data from Ashley Madison and Established Studs &mdash, a sister site that connects wealthy guys to “young, beautiful women” &mdash, unless Avid Life Media (ALM), the Toronto-based company that wields both sites, did not take them down instantaneously. While the hackers’ main objective is to expose the site’s customers for their questionable morals, they also targeted what they say are ALM’s fraudulent business practices.

While they had earlier said that the $Nineteen fee Ashley Madison charges customers to wipe their user data clean does not actually get rid of the information entirely, the post announcing Tuesday’s dump contained extra allegations.

“Find someone you know in here? Keep in mind the site is a scam with thousands of fake female profiles,” the post &mdash, titled “Time’s Up!” &mdash, reads. “90-95% of the actual users are masculine. Chances are your man signed up on the world’s largest affair site, but never had one. He just attempted to. If that distinction matters.”

“We have explained the fraud, deceit and stupidity of ALM and their members,” an earlier paragraph of the Influence Team statement says. “Now everyone gets to see their data.”

Avid Life Media released a statement of its own late Tuesday, condemning the cyberattack and telling they are “actively monitoring and investigating this situation” while cooperating with law-enforcement authorities in the U.S. and Canada, where the company is headquartered.

“This event is not an act of hacktivism, it is an act of criminality. It is an illegal activity against the individual members of AshleyMadison.com, as well as any freethinking people who choose to engage in fully lawful online activities,” the statement reads. “We will not sit idly by and permit these thieves to force their private ideology on citizens around the world.”

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